Adaptation of aquatic microbial communities to hg stress. 1987

T Barkay
Microbial Ecology and Biotechnology Branch, Environmental Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Gulf Breeze, Florida 32561.

The mechanism of adaptation to Hg in four aquatic habitats was studied by correlating microbially mediated Hg volatilization with the adaptive state of the exposed communities. Community diversity, heterotrophic activity, and Hg resistance measurements indicated that adaptation of all four communities was stimulated by preexposure to Hg. In saline water communities, adaptation was associated with rapid volatilization after an initial lag period. This mechanism, however, did not promote adaptation in a freshwater sample, in which Hg was volatilized slowly, regardless of the resistance level of the microbial community. Distribution of the mer operon among representative colonies of the communities was not related to adaptation to Hg. Thus, although volatilization enabled some microbial communities to sustain their functions in Hg-stressed environments, it was not mediated by the genes that serve as a model system in molecular studies of bacterial resistance to mercurials.

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